Consul wrote: ↑May 29th, 2018, 2:07 pm
Three (nonapodictic) reasons might be offered in support of the hypothesis. First, it is hard to see what else consciousness could be. Consciousness exists in a world of matter/energy, not outside of that world (as God and his angels might be supposed to exist), and depends essentially on (other) forms of matter, causally and otherwise. Given that Cartesian dualism has daunting problems, and is not even clearly intelligible, there doesn't seem much of an alternative to supposing mind to be in some way a modification of matter; the question is, in what way. What we really want to know, in thinking about the mind-body problem, is how it is possible for consciousness to be what we know that it must be. What kind of materialism (if we must use the term) is defensible? Put differently, consciousness must be an aspect of the same world that (other) forms of matter are also aspects of, notably the brain. Organisms are modes of matter, with some distinctive properties, and consciousness is a biological property of organisms; so it is only natural to assume that consciousness too is a form of matter. To say that it is a form of an 'immaterial' substance is to fly in the face of the obvious truth that consciousness is part of the world of embodied organisms—not a separate parallel world, with strange causal connections to the regular corporeal world. There is really nothing else for consciousness to be a mode of than the very stuff that everything else is a mode of.
Secondly, conservation laws in physics preclude the idea of a radically new kind of stuff, energy or matter, coming into existence. So when consciousness came to exist, no new substance was added to the world: old stuff simply took on a new form. Descartes' dualism violates conservation, since extra causal powers—extra energy—are introduced by the injection of mind into the world. His immaterial substance is an independent source of energy and hence motion, so that conservation is bluntly violated. A better view is that pre-existing matter takes new forms in cosmic history—from galaxies to organisms—and consciousness must itself be a form of what existed earlier. But there must be a fundamental constancy in the underlying substance of the world, whatever that may be: so consciousness must be a variant on this substance, not a new type of substance."[/i]
First of all, you have to stop thinking that you know our physical world. Our familiar physical world did not just happen as a quantum fluctuation of "nothing". The very idea that it came from nothing appeals to many weak thinkers because iit gives them the sense of completion. Gee, they can say, at least all the evidence of what our physical world consists of is right before our telescopes. Just look far enough away in space, and we can see the beginning of everything. And doesn't that fit in nicely with the physicalist's theories. How could it be as Consul quotes McGinn "... conservation laws in physics preclude the idea of a radically new kind of stuff, energy or matter, coming into existence (dah! A complete violation of the law of 2nd law of thermodynamics, ed). So when consciousness came to exist, no new substance was added to the world". All I can say is, it was about time for physical theory to catch up with itself. One wonders though why not just one more quantum burp to complete our cast of characters.
Anyway, our familiar telescoped world is chock full of evidence of what the world was like before it imploded. First off, why assume it was very different from what is now familiar. There were galaxies that were collapsing to a central point(The Big Crunch, Penrose). Just look at our neutrons and protons. The quarks in them, that generate the strong force, must have been the black hole centers of collapsing galaxies. Three galaxies from before the Big Crunch/BB became, eventually, our neutrons and protons. If that were true then our familiar world is not the "Whole of Our World". We are living amongst the remnants of the world before the Big Bang.
My thesis simply assumes that many of the ancient civilizations of that pre world (100 or so billion years old) survived the Big Crunch/BB., with the aid of technology that was also developed over billions of years. Each of our protons/neutrons may have fostered up to thousands of civilizations per quark. To us, each of those civilizations would be a tiny fraction of the size of a neutron. You might think of them as per your mention of corpuscles, with the added feature that they posses very advanced technology. This theory is consistent with what the ancients before the Egyptians wrote about when the they described creation as a separation of the Gods. (Paul A. LaViolette Ph.D., Genesis of the Cosmos).